Brief overview over her life
Martha Hill was born in East Palestine, Ohio on
December 1, 1900. She attended the Battle Creek Normal School of
Physical Education in Battle Creek, Michigan, graduating in 1920.
She took over the position of dance instructor, teaching ballet
and Swedish gymnastics for the next three years. In 1923, she was
hired as dance instructor at Kansas State Teachers College. Hill
taught there for three years, moving to New York City in 1926.
After arriving in New York, she studied with various
dance teachers; one of note was Martha Graham who would have a
lasting impact on Hill. She was hired in 1927 as Assistant Professor
of Dance at the University of Oregon where Bessie Schonberg was
one of Hill's student.
By 1929, Hill had saved up enough money to move
back to New York. She joined the Martha Graham Dance Company, completed
a BS degree from Teachers College, Columbia University, and began
teaching high school students at the Lincoln School of Teachers
College. She was hired to teach at New York University in the Physical
Education Department of the School of Education in 1930, soon becoming
Director of Dance. Hill reluctantly left the Martha Graham Dance
Company in 1931 because of an increasing teaching schedule. In
1932, Hill was hired by the brand new Bennington College in Bennington,
VT, as Chairman of the Dance Department. She held the positions
at NYU and Bennington College simultaneously until 1951.
In the summer of 1934, Hill initiated a summer
dance festival on the Bennington College campus, named the "Bennington
School of the Dance", which ran until 1942, with a brief interlude
at Mills College in 1939. Doris Humphrey, Martha Graham, Charles
Weidman, and Hanya Holm were key faculty members.
Hill received her Masters degree from New York
University in 1941. In 1948 she formed a School of the Dance at
Connecticut College calling it the "Connecticut College School
of the Dance". The new summer festival employed many of the
same teachers/choreographers from the Bennington festival. Hill
was a co-director of the festival until 1952. The festival was
later renamed the American Dance Festival and is currently housed
at Duke University in North Carolina.
In 1951, William Schuman, president of The Juilliard
School, hired Hill to be the first Director of Dance. Schuman and
Hill had the bold new concept of creating a training ground for
dancers that would be equally split between ballet and modern dance.
Hill married Dr. Thurston Davies in 1952. Davies
died in 1961.
Hill remained the director of dance at Juilliard
until 1985, training generations of dancers to the highest level
of technique and artistry. Her students included Paul Taylor, Muriel
Topaz, Pina Bausch, Daniel Lewis, Linda Kent, Bruce Marks, Mercedes
Ellington, H.T. Chen, and Laura Glenn. Hill was named Artistic
Director Emeritus in 1985, but continued to teach at Juilliard
for several years.
She died on November 19, 1995.